Front cover image for Pulitzer's School Columbia University's School of Journalism, 1903-2003

Pulitzer's School Columbia University's School of Journalism, 1903-2003

James R. Boylan (Author)
Marking the centennial of the founding of Columbia University's school of journalism, this candid history of the school's evolution is set against the backdrop of the ongoing debate over whether journalism can-or should-be taught in America's universities.
eBook, English, 2003
Columbia University Press, New York, 2003
History
1 online resource (viii, 337 Seiten) : Illustrationen
9780231130905, 0231130902
704692556
Chapter 1: "I have selected Columbia"Chapter 2: Schools for Journalists?
Chapter 3: "Dealing with a wild man"
Chapter 4: "A posthumous affair"
Chapter 5: "We will start right away"
Chapter 6: A building called "journalism"
Chapter 7: "What journalism will do to Columbia"
Chapter 8: "If seditiion is to be excluded"
Chapter 9: Red apple and maraschino cherry
Chapter 10: The first dean
Chapter 11: "Ackerman hails stand of press"
Chapter 12: The graduate school
Chapter 13: Speaking to cabots
Chapter 14: "My dear dean"
Chapter 15: Outpost in chungking
Chapter 16: "Sweat and tears"
Chapter 17: Postwar ventures
Chapter 18: The dean and the prizes
Chapter 19: "Training ground"
Chapter 20: "The Pulitzer mandate"
Chapter 21: From dropout to dean
Chapter 22: Short-changed
Chapter 23: "Why a review?"
Chapter 24: Era of expansion
Chapter 25: Edging toward the abyss
Chapter 26: Fallout
Chapter 27: Desperately seeking a dean
Chapter 28: "Welcome to the joint"
Chapter 29: Hohenberg and the prizes
Chapter 30: Meeting fatigue
Chapter 31: "It appears you have a new dean"
Chapter 32: CJR-from new management to old
Chapter 33: "Sour apples"
Chapter 34: Showdown
Chapter 35: To the exits
Chapter 36: The conglomerate
Chapter 37: "Deans' Row"
Chapter 38: Trying to stretch the year
Chapter 39: "Clearly insufficient"
Chapter 40: Has the Pulitzer idea survived?